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Personal (323e0703-f637-4836-a60a-e65d94c7c250)The following is an incomplete list of members and guests who called at Institute headquarters during the period Sept. 10, 1919, to Oct. 10, 1919. L. D. Anderson, Salt Lake City, Utah. P. S. Matthe
Jan 11, 1919
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Concentration and Milling - New and Modernized Gold Recovery Plants Are Especially NumerousBy Charles E. Locke
PROSPERITY of the gold miner has continued with attendant construction of numerous plants, many of them small but some of good size. Many new mills have been erected in Canada and in the Philippines,
Jan 1, 1937
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Continuous Profiling Method of Seismographing for Oil StructuresBy Sylvain Pirson
THE number of seismograph field crews employed in the active survey of potential oil territories is still on the increase, owing to the ever pending threat of a shortage in the supply of crude oil. It
Jan 1, 1937
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The Dollars and Sense of Autogenous GrindingBy H. R. Peterson, G. J. Lipovetz, W. F. McDermott
One of the major improvements in ore grinding economics in North America has been the introduction of autogenous grinding. Pickands Mather & Co. has been active in the development of autogenous grindi
Jan 11, 1972
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Production Engineering - Use of Data on the Build-up of Bottom-hole PressuresBy Morris Muskat
In preparing a well for pumping, observations are often made of the fluid level in the well bore or bottom-hole pressures at various times before equilibrium has set in. From a qualitative point of vi
Jan 1, 1937
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Technical Notes - Effect of Nitrogen on Hardenability in Boron SteelsBy John C. Shyne, Eric R. Morgan
BORON as a hardenability agent of commercial importance has been the subject of extensive study in recent years. It has been suggested in the past that boron increases hardenability by combining with
Jan 1, 1958
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Technical Notes - A Note on the Skin EffectBy Murray F. Hawkins
Horner1 and van Everdingen8 ave shown that the pressure drop within the wellbore, as a result of having produced the well at a constant rate q for time t, where t is sufficiently large, is: van Eve
Jan 1, 1957
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New Rainbow Bridge Across Niagara River an Engineering AchievementBy AIME AIME
COMPLETION of the Rainbow Bridge across the Niagara River and Gorge this fall marks a new page of achievement in the annals of bridge- building. Symbolic of the amity between two great nations, the ne
Jan 1, 1941
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Coal WastageDiscussion of the paper of FRANCIS S. PEABODY, presented at the St. Louis meeting, October, 1917, and printed in Bulletin No. 125, May, 1917, pp. 775 to 781. THE CHAIRMAN (CARL SCHOLZ, Chicago, I11.)
Jan 1, 1918
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Indiana Oolitic LimestoneBy G. F. Loughlin
THE matter of grading Indiana oolitic limestone has been under a cooperative study by the Supervising Architect's office, the U. S. Geological Survey, the Bureau of Standards, and the former Indi
Jan 1, 1929
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Papers - Measurement of Irreversible Potentials as a Metallurgical Research Tool (T.P. 1234, with discussion)By W. L. Fink, M. S. Hunter, R. H. Brown
Early workers attempted to study the structure of alloys by measurement of equilibrium electrode potentials in aqueous solutions containing ions of the metals from which the alloy was made.' The
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Measurement of Irreversible Potentials as a Metallurgical Research Tool (T.P. 1234, with discussion)By M. S. Hunter, W. L. Fink, R. H. Brown
Early workers attempted to study the structure of alloys by measurement of equilibrium electrode potentials in aqueous solutions containing ions of the metals from which the alloy was made.' The
Jan 1, 1941
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The Copper-Rich Corner Of The Copper-Aluminum-Silicon DiagramBy Franklin H. Wilson
COPPER base alloys containing various amounts of aluminum and silicon are of considerable commercial interest. In particular the alloy containing 7 pct aluminum and 2 pct silicon shows an attractive c
Jan 1, 1948
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Coal - Mining Methods in the Pittsburgh District. By the Pittsburgh District Sub- committee on Coal and Coke (with Discussion)The first mention of the mining and use of coal in the Pittsburgh district refers to the mine under Duquesne Heights that furnished coal for the garrison at the fort at Pittsburgh in 1760. Coal had be
Jan 1, 1927
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Mining Methods in the Pittsburgh DistrictTHE first mention of the mining and use of coal in the Pittsburgh district refers to the mine under Duquesne Heights that furnished coal for the garrison at the fort at Pittsburgh in 1760. Coal had be
Jan 10, 1926
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Railroad Presidents Meet with Herbert Hoover and Mining EngineersBy AIME AIME
A COMMITTEE of the American Railroad Association, consisting of Samuel Rea, president of the Pennsylvania System, Chairman; F. D. Underwood, president of the Erie Railroad; A. T. Dice, president of th
Jan 1, 1920
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The Electrolytic Assay of Lead and CopperBy George A. Guess
THE increasing demand for greater speed and more accuracy, in making daily assays of ores and products from mills treating material containing but very small quantities of lead and copper, has caused
Nov 1, 1905
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Part XI - Papers - An Improved Method for Making Starting Sheets for Electrolytic Copper RefiningBy Bengt Helmerson
A new tankhouse was started in January 1959 at the Copper Refinery of the Boliden Co., Skelleftehamn, Sweden. In early 1961 a semiautomatic machine for looping and straightening of starting sheets was
Jan 1, 1967
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Recovery of Molybdenum from Oxidized Ore at Climax, Colo.By John W. Lane, Richard A. Ronzio, Frederick N. Bender
Climax Molybdenum Co. operated a hydrometallurgical plant at Climax, Colo., from August 1966 to August 1968 to recover molybdenum from an oxidized ore. The feed, tailings from sulfide flotation, was f
Jan 1, 1973
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Institute of Metals Division - Annealing of a Cold Rolled Aluminum Single Crystal (Discussion page 1313)By P. A. Beck, A. H. Lutts
IN the classical picture of recrystallization the growth of strain-free grains at the expense of a strained and work hardened matrix is responsible for the softening of cold worked metals on annealing
Jan 1, 1955